11 Ways to Spot Bogus Coffee

bogus coffee
Dan Gentile/Thrillist
Dan Gentile/Thrillist

Even when loaded with a mound of sugar substitute, all coffees are not created Equal. The world's second most popular commodity varies in quality, and, when you're staring at a shelf, it can be hard to detect the cream of the (unfairly traded) crop.

So to help identify a legit bag of beans, we consulted our buddies at Austin, TX's Cuvée Coffee to share with us some red flags to look out for. These aren't all deal-breakers, but if you see several in combination, be wary.

pure coffee
Dan Gentile/Thrillist

The 100% pure coffee ruse

This is the most damning indicator and an absolute deal-breaker. It may be reassuring that your mud isn't mixed with dirt, but the label "100% pure coffee" isn't an indicator of quality, it's actually an admittance of guilt. If it doesn't say 100% arabica, that means they've cut it with lower-quality robusta beans with a higher yield and better resistance to parasites. It also tastes significantly more bitter.
 

"Best by" date instead of "roasted on" date

You want to judge freshness based on when it was roasted rather than when it becomes undrinkable. This is another deal-breaker.

Reliance on flavors
Dan Gentile/Thrillist

Too many flavors

If a brand has a buffet of different artificial flavor profiles, they aren't standing on the quality of their beans. That's not to say a specialty roaster can't have one or two curveballs (Klatch is a good example), but when you're presented with a slew of options, the odds drop that you'll find a decent cup.
 

Overreliance on blends

If you're choosing between brand X's Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Cup Club Blend and Kenya AA (a specific grading), go with the one that has more specificity. A common cost-cutting trick is to buy lower-graded beans to fill out the blend. If a company sells 10 coffees and eight of them are blends, then they probably shouldn't be trusted.

light roast
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Roast levels

Most specialty coffee roasters don't talk about roast levels in terms of light, medium, or dark; rather, they speak in synesthetic flourishes, talking about darker roasts in terms like earthy and chocolaty. If you don't see a few flavor adjectives, chances are the people behind the beans aren't thinking in those terms. Which is a bad sign.
 

Jars or cans

Glass jars tend to dehydrate coffee. Cans and plastic ones do the same. And they aren't environmentally conscious: it takes way more carbon to manufacture and ship them. Clear bags are a bad sign too, as light is one of the primary enemies of the coffee bean. Like Simon and Garfunkel, darkness is its old friend too.

coffee
Dan Gentile/Thrillist

Gigantic amounts of coffee

Unless you're caffeinating an army (or an office), 2lbs of coffee is too much to buy at once. It gets worse with age, and most reputable roasters won't want their product sitting on a shelf for more than a couple weeks.
 

Buzzwords

Natural, pure, and eco-friendly sound great, but don't carry much real weight. Look for a USDA organic certification or Fair Trade certification sticker. This is a particularly fuzzy line because there are a lot of great coffees without these certifications, but be cautious if they're hiding behind overly flowery language. Other signifiers that actually mean something are growing altitude, processing descriptions, and varietal type.

ground coffee
Dan Gentile/Thrillist

If they don't sell whole beans

If a brand doesn't sell a whole-bean offering, it's a very bad sign. First, it's an indicator of potential freshness, but more so it means that the company isn't expecting their customers to tailor the grind size of their beans to the brewing method. It's much harder to make excellent coffee if your grind doesn't match your equipment.

Beans sold in bins

If it's not actually packaged, it's a strong indicator of poor quality because it shows a lack of concern for shelf stability, freshness, and exposure to light and oxygen, causing it to stale very quickly.

Lack of country specificity

Countries like Colombia and Guatemala aren't tiny; they have a lot of different coffees. Listing the farm or region inspires confidence in the sourcing methods, and although the lack thereof isn't necessarily damning, it's a strike against the potential quality.

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Dan Gentile is a staff writer on Thrillist's national food and drink team. He has been called a coffee snob on more than one occasion, but sticks and stones can't break his bones, because they've been strengthened by really, really good coffee. Follow him to Ethiopian beans and nebulous health claims at @Dannosphere.